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I was born and raised in North Korea.
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Although my family constantly struggled against poverty,
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I was always loved and cared for first,
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because I was the only son
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and the youngest of two in the family.
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But then the great famine began in 1994.
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I was four years old.
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My sister and I would go searching for firewood
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starting at 5 in the morning
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and come back after midnight.
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I would wander the streets searching for food,
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and I remember seeing a small child
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tied to a mother's back eating chips,
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and wanting to steal them from him.
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Hunger is humiliation. Hunger is hopelessness.
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For a hungry child, politics and freedom
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are not even thought of.
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On my ninth birthday, my parents
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couldn't give me any food to eat.
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But even as a child, I could feel the heaviness
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in their hearts.
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Over a million North Koreans died of starvation in that time,
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and in 2003, when I was 13 years old,
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my father became one of them.
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I saw my father wither away and die.
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In the same year, my mother disappeared one day,
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and then my sister told me
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that she was going to China to earn money,
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but that she would return with money and food soon.
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Since we had never been separated,
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and I thought we would be together forever,
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I didn't even give her a hug when she left.
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It was the biggest mistake I have ever made in my life.
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But again, I didn't know
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it was going to be a long goodbye.
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I have not seen my mom or my sister since then.
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Suddenly, I became an orphan and homeless.
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My daily life became very hard,
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but very simple.
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My goal was to find a dusty piece of bread in the trash.
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But that is no way to survive.
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I started to realize, begging would not be the solution.
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So I started to steal from food carts in illegal markets.
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Sometimes, I found small jobs
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in exchange for food.
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Once, I even spent two months in the winter
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working in a coal mine,
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33 meters underground without any protection
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for up to 16 hours a day.
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I was not uncommon.
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Many other orphans survived this way, or worse.
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When I could not fall asleep from bitter cold
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or hunger pains,
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I hoped that, the next morning,
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my sister would come back to wake me up
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with my favorite food.
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That hope kept me alive.
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I don't mean big, grand hope.
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I mean the kind of hope that made me believe
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that the next trash can had bread,
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even though it usually didn't.
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But if I didn't believe it, I wouldn't even try,
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and then I would die.
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Hope kept me alive.
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Every day, I told myself,
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no matter how hard things got,
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still I must live.
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After three years of waiting for my sister's return,
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I decided to go to China to look for her myself.
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I realized
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I couldn't survive much longer this way.
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I knew the journey would be risky,
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but I would be risking my life either way.
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I could die of starvation like my father in North Korea,
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or at least I could try for a better life
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by escaping to China.
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I had learned that many people tried to cross
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the border to China in the nighttime to avoid being seen.
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North Korean border guards often shoot and kill people
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trying to cross the border without permission.
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Chinese soldiers will catch
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and send back North Koreans,
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where they face severe punishment.
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I decided to cross during the day,
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first because I was still a kid and scared of the dark,
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second because I knew I was already taking a risk,
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and since not many people tried to cross during the day,
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I thought I might be able to cross
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without being seen by anyone.
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I made it to China on February 15, 2006.
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I was 16 years old.
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I thought things in China would be easier,
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since there was more food.
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I thought more people would help me.
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But it was harder than living in North Korea,
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because I was not free.
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I was always worried about being caught
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and sent back.
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By a miracle, some months later,
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I met someone who was running
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an underground shelter for North Koreans,
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and was allowed to live there
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and eat regular meals for the first time in many years.
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Later that year, an activist helped me escape China
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and go to the United States as a refugee.
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I went to America without knowing a word of English,
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yet my social worker told me that I had to go to high school.
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Even in North Korea, I was an F student.
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(Laughter)
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And I barely finished elementary school.
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And I remember I fought in school more than once a day.
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Textbooks and the library were not my playground.
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My father tried very hard to motivate me into studying,
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but it didn't work.
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At one point, my father gave up on me.
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He said, "You're not my son anymore."
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I was only 11 or 12, but it hurt me deeply.
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But nevertheless, my level of motivation
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still didn't change before he died.
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So in America, it was kind of ridiculous
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that they said I should go to high school.
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I didn't even go to middle school.
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I decided to go, just because they told me to,
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without trying much.
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But one day, I came home and my foster mother
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had made chicken wings for dinner.
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And during dinner, I wanted to have one more wing,
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but I realized there were not enough for everyone,
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so I decided against it.
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When I looked down at my plate,
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I saw the last chicken wing, that my foster father had given me his.
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I was so happy.
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I looked at him sitting next to me.
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He just looked back at me very warmly,
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but said no words.
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Suddenly I remembered my biological father.
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My foster father's small act of love
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reminded me of my father,
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who would love to share his food with me
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when he was hungry, even if he was starving.
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I felt so suffocated that I had so much food in America,
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yet my father died of starvation.
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My only wish that night was to cook a meal for him,
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and that night I also thought of what else I could do
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to honor him.
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And my answer was to promise to myself
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that I would study hard and get the best education
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in America to honor his sacrifice.
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I took school seriously,
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and for the first time ever in my life,
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I received an academic award for excellence,
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and made dean's list from the first semester in high school.
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(Applause)
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That chicken wing changed my life.
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(Laughter)
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Hope is personal. Hope is something
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that no one can give to you.
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You have to choose to believe in hope.
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You have to make it yourself.
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In North Korea, I made it myself.
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Hope brought me to America.
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But in America, I didn't know what to do,
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because I had this overwhelming freedom.
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My foster father at that dinner gave me a direction,
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and he motivated me and gave me a purpose
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to live in America.
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I did not come here by myself.
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I had hope, but hope by itself is not enough.
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Many people helped me along the way to get here.
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North Koreans are fighting hard to survive.
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They have to force themselves to survive,
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have hope to survive,
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but they cannot make it without help.
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This is my message to you.
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Have hope for yourself,
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but also help each other.
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Life can be hard for everyone, wherever you live.
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My foster father didn't intend to change my life.
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In the same way, you may also change someone's life
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with even the smallest act of love.
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A piece of bread can satisfy your hunger,
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and having the hope will bring you bread
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to keep you alive.
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But I confidently believe that
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your act of love and caring
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can also save another Joseph's life
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and change thousands of other Josephs
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who are still having hope to survive.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Adrian Hong: Joseph, thank you for sharing
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that very personal and special story with us.
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I know you haven't seen your sister for, you said,
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it was almost exactly a decade,
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and in the off chance that she may be able to see this,
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we wanted to give you an opportunity
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to send her a message.
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Joseph Kim: In Korean?
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AH: You can do English, then Korean as well.
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(Laughter)
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JK: Okay, I'm not going to make it any longer in Korean
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because I don't think I can make it
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without tearing up.
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Nuna, it has been already 10 years
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that I haven’t seen you.
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I just wanted to say
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that I miss you, and I love you,
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and please come back to me and stay alive.
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And I -- oh, gosh.
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I still haven't given up my hope to see you.
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I will live my life happily
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and study hard
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until I see you,
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and I promise I will not cry again.
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(Laughter)
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Yes, I'm just looking forward to seeing you,
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and if you can't find me,
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I will also look for you,
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and I hope to see you one day.
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And can I also make a small message to my mom?
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AH: Sure, please.
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JK: I haven't spent much time with you,
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but I know that you still love me,
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and you probably still pray for me
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and think about me.
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I just wanted to say thank you
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for letting me be in this world.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)